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The Satellite That Came Back to Life After 46 Years

Satellite orbiting Earth illustration

In February 1965, the U.S. Air Force launched a small experimental satellite called LES-1 into orbit. The mission failed immediately - a wiring error prevented the satellite from reaching its intended orbit, and by 1967 it stopped transmitting completely. For the next 46 years, LES-1 was just another piece of dead space junk tumbling silently through the void.

Then in 2013, something impossible happened. An amateur radio astronomer in Cornwall, England named Phil Williams picked up a faint signal at 237 MHz. After some investigation, he realized it could only be coming from one source: LES-1 had come back to life.

Williams described the signal as having a "particularly ghostly sound." It faded in and out every four seconds like clockwork, pulsing from space like a zombie satellite trying to communicate. Other radio enthusiasts around the world - in Brazil, Germany, and elsewhere - confirmed his discovery. LES-1 was transmitting again.

But how? The satellite was designed to last maybe two years. It had been dead for 46 years. Its batteries should have degraded to nothing decades ago. There was no reason for it to suddenly start working again.

The leading theory is both brilliant and bizarre: after nearly half a century in space, the satellite's battery failed in such a specific way that it created an electrical short, allowing solar panels to power the transmitter directly. The four-second pulse pattern? That's LES-1 tumbling end over end, with the solar panels catching sunlight every four seconds as it spins.

Think about what this means. LES-1 was built with 1960s technology - five decades before smartphones, decades before personal computers. It launched more than ten years before Voyager 1 began its journey to the outer solar system. The electronics were primitive by modern standards.

Yet somehow, those simple 1960s circuits survived nearly half a century of brutal conditions in space: extreme temperature swings, constant radiation bombardment, micrometeorite impacts, and the degradation of all its components. And then, against all odds, they spontaneously repaired themselves in a way that allowed the satellite to transmit again.

After LES-1's resurrection, engineers at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory - where the satellite was originally built - set up a system to track and record it every time it passed over campus. "This is one of the oldest satellites in space and part of Lincoln Laboratory's legacy," said one researcher. "To see it still transmitting after all these years is remarkable."

LES-1 isn't the only "zombie satellite" that's come back from the dead. Others have mysteriously reactivated after years of silence. But LES-1's 46-year gap makes it one of the most dramatic resurrections in space history.

Nobody can physically examine LES-1 to figure out exactly what happened. It's still up there, tumbling through space, sending its ghostly four-second pulse back to Earth. As of 2024, it remains in orbit, a Cold War relic that refused to die.

The satellite that was declared dead in 1967 is still talking. We just don't know why.

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